Song list different, jams sound the same
February 23, 2003 - Cincinnati Enquirer
By Chris Varias
Phish Saturday Concert Review
By now, every semiconscious Cincinnatian knows Phish was in town this
weekend. The world's No. 1 jam band played Friday and Saturday at U.S. Bank
Arena, and both shows sold out in minutes.
The Enquirer ran a review of the Friday show, and now the paper is turning
around and reviewing Saturday night, too. Why, you might ask, would there be
a need to review back-to-back Phish performances in the same city?
Because, as a fan might answer, every show is different, man!
That notion is accepted as truth, because no two Phish set lists are the same
in content or order. Sure enough, not one song from Friday's show was
repeated the next night. But names of songs and lyrics mean very little when
the thrust of a Phish marathon-length performance is the jamming, and many of
the jams sounded interchangeable from one night to the next.
Saturday night's show, counting a 45-minute intermission, was a
three-and-a-half hour event, complete with two 80-minute sets (the second of
which was all of five songs long) plus encore.
The first set began with a brisk succession of songs - a pair of five-minute
tunes. The bluesy "Dog Stole Things" followed the show-opening Zappa-styled
mini-freak-out "Sloth."
Things were just beginning. Next came a medley of "Piper" and "Weekapaug
Groove." The 20-minute piece exemplified what guitarist and singer Trey
Anastasio, bassist Mike Gordon, keyboardist Page McConnell and drummer Jon
Fishman do best: keep the jams fast the way the dance-happy fans like it, and
keep the lyrics to a minimum.
They sort of earned the right to take it slow and easy on the next song, a
dull ballad called "Dirt." But then it was again off to the hippie-boogie
races, first with the electrified faux-bluegrass breakdown "Scent of a Mule,"
a 20-minute number, and later with the set-closing "Sample in a Jar."
The centerpiece of the second set was the 25-minute "Bathtub Gin." Phish's
jamming has more to do with the in-and-out weave of the bass, guitar, and
keyboard playing than with the supposed virtuosity of any of the musicians
themselves. But "Bathtub Gin" was certainly McConnell's moment of the show,
as he peppered the instrumental stretches with a mix of pretty piano lyricism
and discordant pounding.
Copyright © 2003 Cincinnati Enquirer
|
|